"I
further wish to add that there is no Japanese subject who could go against
the will of His Majesty, more particularly among high officials
of the Japanese government or of Japan" (Hideki Tojo, Tokyo Trial, Dec. 31, 1947,
Prime Minister, July 1941-July 1944).

Hirohito, Mastermind of
Japanese Involvement in WWII!

Just as involved in the Pacific War as Hitler was in Europe,
Hirohito worked behind the chrysanthemum curtain, and...survived! The West, blinded by his brilliance, was unable to
see the murky shadow left behind by this erstwhile marine
biologist. Like a god, he showed only the ivory side of his
personality for the mortals to see. David Bergamini's Japan's
Imperial Conspiracy is a classic, unraveling a World War II
riddle and trailing Hirohito's footprints step by step, inch by
inch behind the curtain, leading you to encounter -- Japan's holy ghost!

by Joseph Huang

Tucked away in your local library is a book gathering dust. The author
went "through 140,000 pages of collateral reading in English, French,
and German, 50,000 pages of testimony presented at the postwar Tokyo war
crimes trials, and another 30,000 pages of captured Japanese documents
and U.S. Intelligence reports" -- and more. It is condensed into a
sizable volume with over 1,200 pages, and took the author seven years of
research drawn on his own experiences in Japan, China and the Philippines.
Born in Tokyo and fluent in Japanese, he tells in great detail how Emperor
Hirohito planned step by step to force Japan into war with China and ultimately
with the West. He went through confidential documents and dairies never
before translated, and held interviews with top officials in Japan. That
book is Japan's Imperial Conspiracy, authored by David Bergamini,
published by Heinemann in 1971, London (or by William Morrow, New York)

At the end of the war 28 men were charged with war crimes, and among
them seven were hanged by the Allies after a two-year trial. The seven
were: Hideki Tojo, Seishiro Itagaki, Kenji Doihara, Koki Hirota, Heitaro
Kimura, Akira Muto, Iwane Matsui. The Australian, New Zealand, Dutch and
Chinese officials had all agreed that Emperor Hirohito was the mastermind
of Japanese involvement in the war, and should head any list of Japanese
criminals responsible for the war. They later bowed to a decision by General
MacArthur to use Hirohito for the rehabilitation of Japan, rather than
try him as a criminal under international law.

Therefore, it was not surprising that when the Tokyo Trial started,
Hirohito and his imperial family were off-limits and immune to war crime
prosecutors.

It was the official line that the Emperor was a virtual prisoner of the
militarists. They,
from 1931, effectively seized power and led Japan on its expansionist march
toward Pearl
Harbor. The Emperor was a passive, they said, a withdrawn monarch and a
marine biologist, who was kept inadequately informed of his government's
decisions and was, in any case, unable to control the military. The military,
while invoking the imperial will, were in fact imposing their own.

In due time, the official line concerning Hirohito's responsibilities
in the events leading up to the war was accepted not only by the overwhelming
majority of Japanese themselves but by most of the academic experts --
especially in the United States. They said he "was the focus and symbol
of Japanese patriotism, but did not exercise any power of his own, merely
ratifying the decisions of his ministers" and "his mistake, if
any, was omission not commission".

The Mastermind

In the course of doing his massive research, David Bergamini says,

"In the anecdotes told to me, I perceived that Hirohito, at the
very least, was not
the passive dupe of history that he had been made out to be. From the
mouths of
his chamberlains he emerged as a powerful autocratic protagonist. He
was said
to have extraordinary intelligence. Until 1945 he was said to have kept
up with
every detail of government, to have consulted constantly with officials
of all
sorts, and to have maintained always an over-all view of world affairs.
His
powers -- civil, military, and religious -- were acknowledged to have been
absolute, but he was said to have exercised them only ceremonially and
to have
rubber-stamped the recommendations of his state ministers. Yet in anecdote
after anecdote he was shown keeping abreast of his minister's deliberations
and putting in a word now and then to steer them toward recommendations
which
would be acceptable to him. It was even admitted that he had occasionally
decided between opposing viewpoints, accepted a minority viewpoint, or
disregarded a recommendation altogether" (Japan's Imperial Conspiracy,
p. xxv).

When Allied forces entered Japan, the only papers of any consequence
which fell into
American hands were given voluntarily by the Japanese themselves. The minutes
of meetings of Imperial Headquarters presided over by Emperor Hirohito
in his palace from 1937-1945 had all, it was said, been incinerated. So
were most of the files of the Army General Staff, the Navy General Staff,
and the secret police.

The first handwritten document available is now known as
theSugiyama Memoranda, named after the wartime Army Chief of Staff, General Hajime
Suiyama, who recorded his daily events between 1940 and 1944. Suiyama himself
committed suicide in 1945 and the Sugiyama Memoranda was published
in January 1967, in two volumes.

The second dairy available to the West -- written by a man of the highest
policy-making level -- was the Kido Dairy, kept between 1930 and
1945. He was Marquis Koichi Kido, who had been Lord Privy Seal and chief
civilian advisor to Hirohito in the years between 1940 and 1945. Less than
a tenth was translated either by the prosecution or the defense and placed
in evidence at the International Military Tribunal -- while the rest was
not released until 1966, with the most crucial elements tampered with.

The third journal available was the
Saionji-Harada Memoirs.
These were the notes of Japan's most eminent liberal statesman, Prince Kinmochi Saionji, who had the duty until November 1940 of recommending
to the Emperor the name of the man to be appointed as prime minister. The
memoirs were actually composed by Saionji's political secretary, Baron
Harada, who was planted by Hirohito as a spy in Saionji's staff.

The fourth journal was released in 1967. It was the dairy of General Shigeru
Honjo, written during the years 1931-1936 when he led the conquest of Manchuria
and when he served Hirohito as chief aide-de-camp and military advisor.

These four dairies were said to "contain more than half of all is
known of the highest deliberations of Japanese leaders in the years 1930-1945".

During the research and interviews, David Bergamini related the desire
of interviewees for their identity to be kept confidential as it is dangerous
to speak out even in modern Japan. However, he related one particular Japanese
aristocrat who said to him in English,

"Why, I believe you are leading me on. What do you wish me to say?
I knew
Hirohito as a boy. He was a romantic warlike idiot then and I suppose he
still
is. But I have been out of things for several decades. I do not wish
to be
disturbed in my old age. If you quote me by name I shall deny that I ever
met
you" (ibid, p. xxxvi).

The Constitution

In April 1888, Emperor Meiji ordered the senior members of his oligarchy
and his advisory body to the Throne, the Privy Council, to thrash out a
text of the Constitution. Finally, after much discussion, on February 11,
1889, on the anniversary of Jimmu's ascension to the Throne, the Constitution
was promulgated as a gift of the Emperor to the people. It stated:

"The Empire of Japan shall be reigned over and governed by line
of Emperors
unbroken for ages eternal...The Emperor is sacred and inviolable...The
Emperor convokes the Imperial Diet, opens, closes and prorogues it, and
dissolves the House of Representatives...The Emperor gives sanction to
laws, and orders them to be promulgated and executed...The Emperor, in
consequence of urgent necessity...issues...when the Imperial Diet
is not
sitting, Imperial Ordinances in the place of law...The Emperor has the
supreme command of the Army and Navy...The Emperor determines the
organization of peace standing of the Army and Navy...The Emperor
declares war, makes peace, and concludes treaties...The Emperor confers
titles of nobility, rank, orders and other marks of honor...The Emperor
orders amnesty, pardon, commutation of punishments and rehabilitation"
(Japan's Imperial Conspiracy, p. 261).

The Constitution was said to be a model from Bismark's constitution
for Germany. It
explicitly conferred on the Emperor an unqualified, all-encompassing power
in the Empire. It was in such an environment that young Hirohito inherited
his immense power and influence from the Meiji Constitution that was to
play Japan's leading role that ultimately led to the Pacific war with the
West.

Early Life

Hirohito official birthday was given as April 29, 1901. In his early
childhood he was
kept away from Court life and put into the care of Vice Admiral Sumiyoshi
Kawamura's
household. Kawamura was from the Satsuma samurai clan, and the household
had for thirty years been importing ten British officials to train the
men of Japan's nascent navy.

Approaching the age of four, his naval foster father died and Hirohito
was brought back to the palace. There he was cared for by titled servants.
He was brought up by another samurai and a Court official, Takamasa Kido.
This same Takamasa also adopted a teenage prince, Koichi Kido, to be Hirohito
"big brother" and who was later to become Hirohito's most trusted counselor
during the war period.

Hirohito was then sent into Peers' School. This school was first started
in 1821 to educate the sons of royalty and nobility for their roles in
government. The school provided Hirohito's formal education between the
ages of eight and fourteen.

In 1908, its headmaster was General Maresuke Nogi, a hero, who three years
earlier had sunk the Russian navy in a catastrophic defeat at Tsushima
Strait between Japan and Korea, ushering in the first defeat of an European
power by an Asiatic nation.

Entrusted with the planning of Hirohito's curriculum, Nogi took an intense
interest in the young Emperor-to-be. Nogi was born in 1849 of a samurai
and lived by the samurai code. He imparted his values to the young Hirohito.
He would train Hirohito to be ashamed of torn clothes, but never of patched
ones, and to live simply. From the age of ten onward, Hirohito was trained
to become a competent athlete and was engaged in other exhausting physical
training. Nogi would discipline him to withstand suffering, to endure standing-still
while naked under a glacial waterfall, without shivering.

Under Nogi's tutelage, Hirohito tackled the written language, some English,
Chinese
characters or kanji, and calligraphy. Mentally he was given long hours
of lectures and plenty of homework.

Among Hirohito's other "big brothers" who attended school
with him at Peers' School were: Prince Yasuhiko Asaka, who raped Nanking
in 1937; his half-brother and near twin, Prince Naruhiko Higashikuni, who
became prime minister in 1945; Prince Naruhisa Kitashirakawa, who died
in the course of an intelligence mission in France in 1923; Kitashirakawa's
half brother, Marquis Teruhisa Komatsu, who oversaw Naval Staff studies
for the attack on Pearl Harbor; and Prince Fumimaro Konoye, who led Japan
to war with China as prime minister in 1937.

When the Crown Prince Hirohito grew older, he was singled out from the
Peers' School, put into the exclusive hands of private tutors and under
the charge of popular war heroes, including two old Prussian-oriented generals,
lecturers from Tokyo Imperial University or from Army or Navy headquarters.
They taught him tactics, strategy and the samurai code. They kept him well
informed about the battles of the First World War and its strategic implications
for the Orient.

Under Hirotaro Hattori, he learned natural history and Darwinism, and
became interested in worms and shellfish, which interest was to win him
a reputation as a marine biologist. As years went by, and as the student-Emperor's
knowledge of biology increased, Hattori was to be Hirohito's assistant.

Marriage into the Satsuma Clan

A proposed marriage alliance was made when Hirohito chose a girl from
the Satsuma
clan to be his bride. The Satsuma clan was a samurai clan on the southern
end of Kyushu
island. They were the traditional sea-warriors and provided a large proportion
of officers for the Imperial Japanese Navy.

The princess was Nagako, daughter of Prince Kuniyoshi Kuni and allied
to the Satsuma clan lord, Hisamitsu Shimazu. The proposed marriage displeased
the major rival clan, the Choshu, a Strike-North faction into Russia, who
were situated on the southwestern corner of Honshu island.

Earlier, the Choshu had provided the main thrust for Emperor Meiji to
dislodge the
Tokugawa shogunate and thereafter the Imperial Household was indebted to
the Choshu clan, whose last remaining elderly "genre" and one
of the few survivors of the Meiji reign was the former Army Chief of Staff,
General Aritomo Yamagata.

When opposition from the Choshu clan came, Prince Kuni threatened that
he and Nagako would commit suicide if she was jilted. After all, Princess
Nagako was Hirohito's choice. Unfortunately for Prince Kuni, in the course
of a full medical examination, Princess Nagako was discovered to be color-blind.
As the bad news spread, fear struck the Imperial household that the Emperor's
heirs might themselves be born with a genetic affliction. The imperial
affairs then degenerated into a noisy family and clan row. Yamagata called
on Hirohito to cancel the engagement while Prince Kuni argued that it was
the Empress and Hirohito's choice.

Ultimately, it was Japan's underground world that was to rout the Choshu
clan and
determined Hirohito and Japan's future. When opposition continued to mount,
Prince Kuni hired the powers of persuasion of the Black Dragon gang-lord
Mitsuru Toyama to frighten off General Yamagata. Toyama succeeded and eventually,
the proposed marriage went ahead on January 26, 1924, and gang-lord Toyama
was one of the honored guests. When Hirohito was enthroned two years later,
Toyama was again among the honored guests.

Indeed it was the plan of Hirohito as well, because the Satsuma clan
was a naval power whose influence was to sway Hirohito on a Strike-South
policy of expansion into the rich lands of the colonial Western powers.
The Army was divided. One group, the Imperial Way Group, advocated the
Strike-North policy while another group, the Control Clique in the Emperors
Cabal, fought for the Strike-South policy. Although the Strike-South people
were the minority in the establishment, they had the backing of the industrialists
who had foreign interests in the South Seas; and by the priests of the
imperial family who believe that Emperor Jimmu, the progenitor of the imperial
family, had come from the south.

Hirohito also believed in the Strike-South policy because he saw no
profit for the expansion of the empire except in the islands of the south
where there was rubber, oil and other resources for Japan's own industrial
use. Eventually, this course was what brought Japan into war with China,
Great Britain, Australia, Holland, and the United States -- and why it
ultimately had to relinquish its entire empire through defeat in 1945.

Strike-South Hirohito

Before becoming Emperor, Hirohito made a tour of Europe in 1921. His
father Taisho was bed-ridden and doctors had said his condition was irreversible.
So, when Hirohito returned from abroad he would probably have to assume
the full leadership of his country. After watching hundreds of school children
lining the shores in the southern point of Japan waving soyonara
to their Crown Prince, Hirohito began to settle down. On the long voyage
through the South Seas, the Indian Ocean and Mediterranean, it gave him
time to think and to formulate a program of his own. David Bergamini, after
studying many accounts of Hirohito's life during the following forty-five
years, and of those who know him intimately, wrote:

"Hirohito began all considerations with a sad awareness that his
father's reign
had been a failure. The dream of the ancestors to rule theocratically
and keep
Japan sacred for the Sun Goddess remained unfulfilled. Hirohito had
reservations about the dream. It was too insular, too mystical and unscientific.
Because of his training in geography and economics, Hirohito could not
think
of Japan in isolation but only as a part -- the leading part -- of Asia.
Because of
his scientific training he could not accept the legend of the Sun Goddess
at face
value. He was a devout Shinto priest and believed in the ghosts of his
ancestors, but not in a simple superstitious way like most of his countrymen.
He would eventually rationalize his creed by grafting onto it the semi-scientific
spiritualism of such Western thinkers as the astrophysicist Sir James Jeans
and
the physiologist J.. Haldane. Hirohito believed that the spirits were
always
present and even available for consultation but only as psychic wave forms
permeating the ether. He doubted that they could provide physical assistance
to men in battle, as many Japanese believed. No, if his country was to
realize
her imperial ambitions, she would have to count on armies of living men
equipped with modern weapons and deployed with coolheaded statesmanship.
He was inclined to agree with his father that the most natural growth for
Japan
would be as a sea power into the islands of Southeast Asia"
(Japan's Imperial
Conspiracy, pp. 314-5).

During this long voyage, the Crown Prince had on board influential members
of the
Satsuma clan, his new alliance who favored a maritime expansion in the
South Seas, and who were antagonistic against the Choshu clan which had
provided Emperor Meiji with many of his oligarchs. In the cities of Europe,
they were to be joined by representatives of other non-Choshu interests.

In Europe, Hirohito met many young Japanese officers working in factories,
learning new industrial techniques and copying whatever they could in cities
like Paris, Zurich, Frankfurt, the Ruhr, and the Saar. What was remarkable
was that these spies were to provide Japan with half of all fascist generals
of the 1930's and 1940"s. These included many of Hirohito's own Imperial
family members.

Prince Higashikuni

Among the young officers that the Crown Prince met in Europe was Prince
Naruhiko
Higashikuni (born 1887), the ninth son of Prince Asahiko and an uncle of
Hirohito. Known also as Big Brother to Hirohito, Prince Higashikuni was
in Paris setting up an organization for army intelligence. The first historic
meeting was held on October 27, 1921 at the German spa of Baden-Baden.
Present were Tetsuzan Nagata, Toshiro Obata and Yasuji Okamura who were
to be known as the Three Crows, of whom Nagata was the most influential.
All three were trained in military intelligence and were serving in Europe
at Japanese embassies as attaches. It was in this secret meeting that a
strategy to purge the samurai leadership of the Choshu clan in Army leadership,
a plan to reorganize the Army into a modern and effective force, and a
plan to take over Manchuria was formulated. Among the young officers who
attended was Hideki Tojo, the prime minister who launched the Pacific war
with the West.

The meeting was to select "Eleven Reliables" to carry out
their program. Only two were present at the meeting. The others were then
in China, Siberia, or Japan. All were young officers, graduates of 1904-1905,
the years when Japan was victorious over Russia. All the eleven were from
non-Choshu clans. Three of them, Tojo, Seishiro Itagaki, and Kenji Doihara
were later to become infamous with their conduct and were hanged as Class
A war criminals in 1948.

The Three Crows and the Eleven Reliables were to form the Emperor's
Cabal to work in secret Hirohito's programs within the Army and Navy. Further
recruits joined the Cabal
through the University Lodging House and other societies.

At the end of the Pacific war, Prince Higashikuni, in his old age, took
responsibility for
all he had wrought by becoming prime minister in the first two humiliating
months after Japan's surrender.

Prince Kanin

Prince Kotohito Kanin (1865-1945) was the adopted son of Emperor Komei,
the father of Emperor Meiji. Having outlived the last of his brothers,
he ranked as senior member of the Imperial family from 1923 to 1945. He
was a graduate of the French military academy, and rose through the officer
corps to the rank of Field Marshal.

Prince Kanin planned the attempt in 1916 to assassinate Chinese warlord
Chang Tso-lin and occupy Manchuria. In December 1931, during the conquest
of Manchuria, Prince Kanin accepted the highest post in the Army, that
of Chief of Staff. He retained that position until October 1940 when the
war with China was well underway. When the decision to join the Axis was
made, Prince Kanin was still the Army Chief of Staff.

In his late seventies, he continued to assist Hirohito with Army manipulations
until his death on May 21, 1945.

Commander-in-Chief

After the elderly former Army Chief of Staff, General Aritomo Yamagata,
was mortally ill, the advice and influence to the throne from the Meiji
oligarchy was left vacant. The best candidate was Prince Kinmochi Saionji,
the last remaining oligarch from the Satsuma clan.

In 1921, a deal was agreed upon between Prince Saionji and Hirohito
whereby Saionji, given the status of genro, would provide advice
to the Throne, recommending to Hirohito the men for cabinet formation while
the Emperor would give up overt leadership of his cabal and respect all
the conventions of a constitutional monarchy. To Prince Saionji, this meant
having the voice of the people heard and to Hirohito, it allowed him to
work behind the chrysanthemum curtain.

To restrict the power of politicians, the Constitution was manipulated
to confine the War and Navy ministries to be filled from active lists of
generals and admirals. As active officers were bound by imperial orders,
the cabinet, on advice from Prince Saionji, could not be formed without
the Emperor's approval. Hirohito and his advisors could use this tactic
to influence politicians through the blocking of any formation of undesirable
cabinets or to topple cabinets which had served their purpose.

Thus from April 1931 to February 1937 there were five cabinet formations,
each with
an average life span of 14 months. As the Strike-South policy gathered
momentum, in the following years, from February 1937 to August 1945, there
were a total of ten cabinet formations, each, on the average, shortening
the life span to ten months. The ambiguous beast, "the Army"
or the "Cabinet," was always held publicly responsible and to
be blamed, and the fearful, reverent taboo-stricken people politely ignored
the reality -- that behind the chrysanthemum curtain, Hirohito was in fact,
as well as in name, the Army and Navy's Commander-in-Chief.

Prince Saionji was to live out his life, until the age of ninety-one
in 1940, "in bitter disillusionment" because most of his advice
was subjugated by Hirohito and the Lord Privy Seal. In later years, the
Lord Privy Seal, a position appointed by the Emperor to advise the Imperial
Head, would conduct all the business involved in the choice of the prime
minister and his cabinet, and simply informed Saionji of what he had done
before carrying his advice formally to the Emperor.

An Indoctrination Center

While the Cabinet and Prince Saionji were overtly involved in running
the country, within the sacred walls of the palace was an old Meteorological
Observatory Institution which Hirohito converted into an undercover indoctrination
center for young men who wished to transform Japan through global conquest.
First called the Social Problems Research Institution, the center later
was given a code name of Daigaku Ryo, or University Lodging House.
The Emperor entrusted the administration of the Lodging House to his chief
advisor, Lord Privy Seal, Count Makino, who in turn, entrusted it to a
brilliant Dr. Shumei Okawa.

Dr. Okawa was a graduate from Tokyo Imperial University and a scholar
in Oriental philosophy. He went in search of a vision to have faith
in the Japanese mission to free the universe. For a decade he was
a spy working in China, but was also the trusted lieutenant of gang-lord
Mitsuru Toyama and also a leader of his own gang, the Black Dragon Society.

Dr. Okawa was known as the "Goebbels of Japan." He provided the ideology
and propaganda for the Strike-South faction which espoused war against
Western colonies in the south seas rather than against Communist Russia.
He operated as a member of the Civilian Spy Service. He was fluent in
English, French, German, Sanskrit, Arabic and several other languages.
He worked as an intelligence agent in China for the Army General Staff
from 1911 to 1918.

In January 1922, Dr. Okawa received an invitation to become headmaster
at the Lodging House in the Palace. His curriculum in the Lodging House
involved studies in ethics, weapons, contingency planning, army reorganization,
geopolitical theories, and the function of the throne. Among those giving
lectures at the Lodging House were the Three Crows, several of the Eleven
Reliables, secret policemen, commercial spies, narcotics experts, pimps,
terrorists, and interrogation specialists. Only the young and smartest
members of the General Staff and of the faculties of the Army and Navy
were able to attend the institute, allowing them to mix intimately with
influential political and military men of position. David Bergamini wrote:

"Here studied everyone of the Class A war criminals tried by
Aliied judges in 1946 and 1947. Here, if anywhere, was hatched the
criminal conspiracy of which Japan's war leaders, with the exception of
Hirohito, were judged guilty. Here only were all Japan's criminals together
in one place at one time to conspire" (ibid., p. 331).

Amold C. Brackman, a correspondent for United Press during the Occupation
and one of the reporters who covered the Tokyo war crimes trials wrote
about the actual courtroom drama in Tokyo:

"Like any good fanatic, Okawa was also a combination ideologue,
paranoiac,
propagandist, racist, and terrorist...Okawa believed in a one-party
system
and advocated the regimentation of the Japanese people for a war of world
conquest. He operated a school for radicals in which each year twenty bright
young boys of peasant background were trained in his fascist doctrines
and sent
into the hinterland to develop activist cells. As a cover for his activities,
Okawa
directed the East Asia Research Institute, which was partly financed by
the
financial interests behind the South Manchurian Railway. Okawa also
participated in three abortive coups d'etat in the early thirties against
cabinets
that opposed the politics of the militarists and right-wing fanatics. One
of the
coups resulted in the murder of the premier" (The Other Nuremberg,
1987,
p. 79).

Through his appointment as headmaster of the Lodging House, Dr Okawa
was widely known to have been the rogue mediating between the palace and
rightist thugs in all the plots which had rocked the nations early in the
1930s.

The Rape of Nanking

According to the massive research done by David Bergamini, among Emperor
Hirohito's most intimate links with atrocities was surprisingly none other
than the rape of Nanking! Officially, the army was considered responsible
for that crime under General Iwane Matsui, who was to go down in history
as the "butcher of Nanking", and one of the seven convicted and
hanged after the war.

Matsui's army in Nanking was a result of Emperor Hirohito's decision
to send troops
into North China in 1937. It started with Hirohito summoning General Iwane
Matsui, around August 15, 1937, to appear before him in the Imperial Palace
and giving him instructions to build up forces around Nanking.

However, on December 2, 1937, there was a sudden turn of events when
General Matsui was suffering from tubercular fever. He was relieved by
Emperor Hirohito from his duty in the field and later put on a destroyer
and removed to Shanghai. Subsequent crimes in Nanking were issued in his
name as "overseeing the enforcement of Matsui's orders". By December
7, 1937, about 300,000 Japanese troops were ready to conquer Nanking.

"Emperor Hirohito had stamped the orders sending troops into
north China in
1937. It was later said that he did so unwillingly, yet he went on
two months
later to stamp orders for the dispatch of troops to central and south China
as
well. He reluctantly postponed execution of the south-China order on
the advice
of hesitant 'militarists' in the Japanese General Staff. He opened an Imperial
Headquarters in his palace so that he could personally supervise the fighting.
He
became so immerged in war planning that the prime minister at the time
complained of his preoccupation. Finally his own uncle assumed command
of
the attack on Nanking, the Chinese capital, and moved into a hotel in Nanking,
to look on while his troops murdered over 100,000 defenseless military
and
civilian prisoners there. It was the first act of genocide in World War
II, but
when the uncle returned to Tokyo, Hirohito went out of his way to confer
decorations and honors upon him" (ibid., p. xxv-xxvi).

In place of General Matsui, Hirohito sent Prince Yasuhoko Asaka of the
House of Fushimi. Prince Asaka was the eighth son of Prince Asahiko, who
served as the chief counselor to Emperor Komei.

Prince Asaka

When General Matsui was transferred to Shanghai, Hirohito commissioned
Prince Asaka with fresh Imperial instructions (along with his personal
seal) to "kill all captives", and to act as Commander-in-Chief
of the Army around Nanking. Prince Asaka left Tokyo by plane on December
5 and arrived to take command of the front three days later and to team
up with General Kesago Nakajima, described as the Himmler of Japan, a specialist
in thought control, intimidation, and torture. It was Nakajima who would
superintend, in detail, the Nanking atrocities.

As the Japanese troops were closing in and tension intensified around
Nanking, one of
the Emperor's courtiers described Hirohito as "taking no recreation
and exercising a wide
intensive supervision of military operation" (ibid.,
p. 24). He was totally absorbed in long-term military planning from the
very beginning. Prime Minister Konoye was reported to have said to Marquis
Kido, "I just met with the Emperor and he is talking of strategy all
the way up to next March. He mentioned sending a division to Canton..." (ibid., p. 25).

By December 7, seeing the inevitable, Chiang Kai-shek left the Nanking
capital. Almost 800,000 inhabitants also fled into the hinterlands. Though
there were American, German, and British safety zones, the Japanese refused
to recognize them.

On December 9 Hirohito's uncle, Prince Asaka, ordered a general assault
on the city.
According to Tokyo's Asahi newspaper report the following
day, Prince Asaka stood Napoleonic-like on a hill to the east and "watched
the fall of the city surrounded by clouds of gunsmoke". Three days
later Nanking fell and, within the next two days, General Nakajima and
his division rolled into Nanking capturing men, women and children as prisoners.

Altogether there were approximately 300,000 standing captives with some
10,000 already killed which were replaced by a further 10,000 captured
at the last moment. Then the order came from the Emperor's uncle, Prince
Asaka, to "kill all captives". Some 80,000 Japanese soldiers
were let loose by Prince Asaka and General Nakajima, who would

"have raped, killed, stolen, and burned if left to their own devices.
In the event
they acted under the guidance of their officers; they worked at being
drunk and
disorderly; they ran amok, but systematically. Their rape of Nanking
began
when Nakajima entered the city on December 14; it continued for six weeks;
and it was not stopped, despite world-wide protest..." (ibid.,
p. 35).

In addition, the Safety Zone Committee filed 444 carefully authenticated
"cases" of
murder, mass murder, rape, arson, and pillage with Prince Asaira's staff
officers in charge while the terror was in progress. An eye witness, the
Reverend John Magee, the postwar chaplain of Yale University, documented
the sights he saw with a movie camera. His black-and-white film was later
smuggled home to the United States, and the scene was described as a "parade
of mutilated corpses, blood-spattered rooms, and babies on bayonets [and]
was considered too revolting to exhibit except to a few limited audiences"
(ibid.).

According to estimates issued by the Military Tribunal after the war,
some 20,000 women were raped in Nanking and over 200,000 men were murdered.
Despite world-wide protest against the crime, none of the criminals were
punished by the Japanese government at that time. It was official doctrine
that the troops in the field had gone berserk and nothing could be done
about them.

Instead, according to David Bergamini,

"More relevant facts are these: That on the day after the capture
of Nanking
Emperor Hirohito expressed his 'extreme satisfaction' to Prince Kanin,
his
wife's grand-uncle, who was chief of the Army General Staff...a month
later, on February 26, Emperor Hirohito received the febrile Matsui
the
princely Asaka...and rewarded each of them with a pair of silver vases
embossed with the imperial chrysanthemum...[and] as for sadistic
Nakajima,
who had dirtied himself most in the rape, he was allowed to retire from
the
Army in 1939 and to live out his life in comfort on the spoils which he
had
brought back from Nanking" (ibid., p. 45-6).

At the end of the war, General Matsui was used as a scapegoat for the
massacre at
Nanking. After the verdict was pronounced from the Tribunal, Matsui must
have accepted the fact that it was, after all, his religious duty to die
for the Emperor. As for Prince Asaka, he continued to play golf with the
Emperor. David Bergamini expressed his disappointment, "It is an incredible
fact of the Matsui case that Prince Asaka, who was in direct command at
Nanking was never summoned into court to testify even as a witness, much
less as a defendant" (ibid., p. 47).

Tripartite Pact

Almost three years later, an historical conference was held in the Palace
-- in the Imperial Presence -- on September 19, 1940. Besides the Emperor
there were eleven participants -- including Prince Hiroyasu Fushimi, representing
the Navy General Staff; Prince Konoye, representing the Cabinet; and Prince Kanin, the Army Chief of Staff. After much discussion on the details of
oil consumption and procurement, Prince Kanin said,

"On the basis of our studies to date, the Army section of the Imperial
Headquarters agrees with the government's proposal for a stronger Axis
Pact
with Germany and Italy" (ibid., p. 726).

Summing up for the Navy, Prince Fushimi said,

"The Navy section of Imperial Headquarters agrees with the government's
proposal that we conclude a military alliance with Germany and Italy...that
the Strike-South will be attempted in so far as possible by peaceful means...that harmful anti-British and anti-American statements and behavior will
be
restrained...that the government and the Navy Supreme Command agree on
the need to speed up the strengthening of naval power and preparedness..."
(ibid., p. 727).

Finally on behalf of the Throne, Privy Council President Hara stated:

"Even though a Japanese-American clash may be unavoidable in the
end, I hope
that sufficient care will be exercised to make sure that it will not come
in the
near future, and that there will be no miscalculations. I give my approval
on
this basis" (ibid.,).

On September 27, 1940, the Tripartite Pact was signed in Hitler's presence
in Berlin. It was an application of the American Monroe Doctrine for Europe
and Asia. By its first article, Japan recognized "the leadership of
Germany and Italy in the establishment of a new order in Europe."
By its second article, Germany and Italy extended the same recognition
to Japan's predatory rights in Asia. The Axis pledged for a period of ten
years "to assist one another with all political, economic, and military
means" if any one of them should be attacked by the United States.

To prepare for the coming inevitable war with the United States, and
not to taint the hands of the imperial family, seventy-five-year old Prince
Kanin resigned from his duty and was replaced by his minion, General Hajime
Sugiyama. Prince Fushimi resigned too, paving the way for Osami Nagano
as Navy Chief of Staff. Rumors were spread to the U.S. Ambassador that
Hirohito had approved the Tripartite out of fear of assassination by Army
extremists.

By October 12, 1940, Prime Minister Prince Konoye formally inaugurated
his totalitarian party, the Imperial Rule Assistance Association (I.R.A.A.).
By this ruling, all other political parties were abolished and totalitarian
rule was extended to all offices and factories.

In the following twelve months, secret preparations were made for war
with the Western powers. The Emperor had made the decision to join the
Axis. It then was just a matter of time before Japan would be at war with
the United States. Regarding such a tense situation, David Bergamini wrote:

"Hirohito alone stood at the top of the mountain. He alone
had full access to Army planning, Navy planning, Foreign Ministry planning,
and the policy making thoughts of his intimate advisors. He fully understood
the need to decide soon on war or peace. He may have genuinely hoped that
by negotiation and threat he could wring a foothold in the East Indies
from the British, Dutch, and Americans without having to fight for it.
At the same time he was planning for the contingency of war, and in so
doing he was preoccupied with considerations beyond the ken of his chiefs
of staff" (ibid., p. 777).

He continued regarding military matters,

"If Americans were to be taken by surprise and beaten, utmost
security must shroud Japan's attack plans; they must be worked out and
practiced down to the last detail; and Japanese officials -- even the
chiefs of staff -- must be kept in ignorance of them until the last possible
moment. Officials who had to deal with newsmen and ambassadors would
stand a far better chance of lulling Western suspicions if they knew nothing
of the attack plans than they would if they knew everything and tried to
conceal their knowledge" (ibid.).

During the month of August 1941, Hirohito commenced his review of the
Navy's war planning. Combined Fleet commander Admiral Yamamoto had conducted
exercises to ensure that his men, ships and planes were physically capable
of handling the attack on Pearl Harbor.

September 6, Imperial Conference

Three months before the attack on Pearl Harbor, during an historical
imperial conference meeting on September 6, 1941 -- presided over by Hirohito
himself -- Japan set her course which was to be irreversible. The decision
to go to war was further strengthened in the presence of all the Cabinet
ministers and Chiefs of Staff. The papers discussed were:

1/. "The purpose of war with the United States, Great Britain,
and the Netherlands is to expel the influence of these three countries
from East Asia, to establish a sphere for the self-defense and self-preservation
of our Empire, and to build a New Order in Greater East Asia.

2/. "A war with the United States and Great Britain will be long,
and will become a war of endurance. It is very difficult to predict the
termination of war, and it would be well-nigh impossible to expect the
surrender of the United States. However, we cannot exclude the possibility
that the war may end because of great change in American public opinion... At any rate, we should be able to establish an invincible position:
by building a strategically advantageous position through the occupation...of rich resources of the Southern Regions.

3/.We must carry out military preparations as secretly as possible,
conceal our intentions, and refrain from sending additional forces
to southern French Indochina...Diplomatic negotiations during this Period
should be conducted with a view toward facilitating the switch-over
from political to military methods.

4/. "[If] we promise not to use military force in the south, we
must put China under the complete control of our Empire. To do that, it
is absolutely essential to station the necessary forces there...If they
(Americans) do not accede to the conditions that we propose, we must regard
it as disclosing their true intention, which is to bring Japan to her knees"
(ibid., p. 783-4).

In this conference Japan set her course toward war, but decided to continue
intensive diplomatic activities as a cover with the United States.

During the next few weeks, Prime Minister Konoye resigned. By October
17, after much searching and discussion, Hirohito's advisor, Lord Privy
Seal Kido proposed War Minister Tojo to be made Prime Minister and Home
Minister besides retaining his war ministry portfolio. Hirohito, after
giving a private audience to Kido "enthusiastically endorsed this
proposal" and praised him for his choice and regarded Tojo as the
best possible wartime Premier.

Tojo was a tough, able bureaucrat, unselfishly devoted to Hirohito and
appearing to be reliable. The Emperor's advisor, Lord Privy Seal Kido described
Tojo and his relationship with Hirohito as such:

"Of all the generals in the limelight, Tojo appeared to be the
most reliable.
Hirohito liked him...because he never held anything back. He was also
intensely hard-working and impeccably honest. Whereas other military police
chiefs in Manchukuo had become rich men, Tojo remained poor, and still
distributed part of his salary to destitute members of his former regiment"
(Hirohito: Behind the Myth, p. 279).

David Bergamini, describing the appointment of Tojo and his relationship
with Hirohito, was more cordial:

"In appointing Tojo simultaneously Prime, War, and Home Minister,
Hirohito
gave him enough power to act as a shogun, a wartime dictator. Hirohito
showed no uneasiness at delegating this immense power, for be was really
delegating only responsibility and he trusted Tojo implicitly. Events would
prove that his trust was not misplaced. Tojo and the Emperor had much in
common: a quick appreciation of technical realities, a meticulous attention
to
detail, an impatience with too much indirect and belly talk, a charm which
extended only to immediate personal relationships, and a blind pride in
the
righteousness of Japan's cause. Both men shared a conviction that 'the
Japanese race' had been persecuted by the white race. Both men had
succeeded in cloistering themselves from the realities of Japan's own barbarous
racism in dealing with fellow Asiatics" (Japan's Imperial Conspiracy,
p. 801).

The next day, on October 18, Hirohito promoted Tojo from the rank of
lieutenant general to that of full general to implement the decision made
at the Imperial Conference of September 6. So it was that Tojo became Prime
Minister of Japan and in American and Western eyes, the arch-villain responsible
for Japan's eighty years of planning against the West.

Tojo's next job was to hide all intentions of war at all costs, and
to plan the "surprise attack". In the afternoon, after promoting
Tojo to full general, and knowing of spectacular events to come shortly,
Hirohito and Kido went together to the Yasukuni Shrine to worship the spirits
of the dead warriors.

Order Number One

As far back as pre-World War I, the old Prince Kuni, the Empress's father,
had
championed the development of air and navy power in Japan, and Admiral
Isoroku Yamamoto was the most brilliant of his disciples. He was a professional
athlete, full of confidence and belonging to the younger generation of
naval strategists. Under Yamamoto, even under a lean budget, Japan became
the most up-to-date naval and air power in the world.

On November 1, 1941, Admiral Yamamoto and his staff gained Hirohito's
editorial
approval for the final draft of' Order Number One, the comprehensive plan
of Army and Navy operations that were to be carried out in the months ahead.
It was a top-secret 151-page document, and three hundred numbered copies
were issued. David Bergamini records:

"Few in the Army knew of Yamamoto's plan. The over-all commander
for
Army operations in the south, General Count Terauchi, had been let in on
it
only six weeks previously. Army Chief of Staff Sugiyama, by the evidence
of
his own memoranda, had been informed of it a scant four days before. Shogun
Tojo was probably still in the dark about it. Civilians like Foreign Minister
Tojo simply knew that the Navy had a plan for 'ambushing' the U.S. fleet.
They assumed -- and it was one of the assumptions on which they based their
disapproval of war -- that the 'ambush' would take place only if the U.S.
Navy
was foolish enough to steam west in order to relieve the Philippines after
it had
been attacked, Only Hirohito, a few members of his family, the staff
chiefs, and some of Yamamoto 's own trusted naval colleagues yet knew of
the Pearl Harbor plan" (ibid., p. 806).

On November 3, Navy Chief of Staff Nagano and Army Chief of Staff Sugiyama
received their bound, numbered copy. Both were scheduled to meet Hirohito
in the palace, who too had his own copy of Order Number One before him.
The bound document incorporated the Pearl Harbor attack plan as a feature
in a comprehensive blueprint for the whole Strike-South campaign. It stated
in part:

"Despite the fact that the Empire has always maintained a friendly
attitude
toward the United States, the United States has interfered in all the measures
which we have taken out of self-preservation and self-defense for the protection
of our interests in East Asia. Recently she has blocked our speedy settlement
of the China Incident by aiding the government of Chiang Kai-shek and has
even resorted to the final outrage of breaking off economic relations with
us..."
(ibid., p. 805-6).

During the conference, detailed points and questions were raised taking
into consideration the monsoon season along the Malayan front, troop movements
and other strategies.

At one point, Hirohito asked for the target date on Pearl Harbor,
"What is the Navy's
target date?" "December 8 is the target date", replied
the Navy Chief of Staff Nagano. "Isn't that a Monday?"
asked Hirohito. Nagano pointed out that December 8th was Monday, Japanese
time, or Sunday 7, Hawaiian time. The date and time was chosen because
spies had reported back that U.S. personnel were bibulous on Saturday nights
followed by lethargic Sunday mornings. The plan was to coordinate all the
attacks simultaneously using Hawaii as the focal point.

On November 4, 1941, Yamamoto's Order Number One was officially converted
into
a Taimei or Great Order by Hirohito affixing his seal to it. In
explaining his decision, Privy Council President Hara, acting on behalf
of the throne, stated,

"At the last Imperial Conference it was decided that we would go
to war...

"...We cannot let the present situation continue. If we miss
the present
opportunity to go to war, we will have to submit to American dictation.
Therefore, I recognize that it is inevitable that we must decide to
start a war
against the United States. I will put my trust in what I have been
told: namely,
that things will go well in the early part of the year; and that although
we will
experience increasing difficulties as the war progresses, there is some
prospect
of success...

"As to what our moral basis for going to war should be, there is
some merit in
making it clear that Great Britain and the United States represent a strong
threat
to Japan's self-preservation. Also, if we are fair in governing occupied
areas,
attitudes toward us would probably relax. America may be enraged for a
while,
but later she will come to understand...

"Do you have any other comments? If not, I will rule that the proposals
have
been approved in their original form" (ibid., p. 815-6).

The war had been decided and steps must be taken to keep war preparation
as secret as possible. The next step for Japan was to send a special envoy
to Washington to assist Ambassador Kichisaburo Nomura as a subterfuge.
The envoy selected was Saburo Kurusu, a career diplomat, who consummated
the Tripartite Pact with Hitler as Japan's Ambassador in Berlin a year
earlier. Kurusu's mission was a delicate one. He had to negotiate without
endangering security.

Countdown to Pearl Harbor

Back in Japan gozen heigo, described as "soldier chess games
in the Imperial Presence" were conducted in secret places. During
late October, 1941, to avoid suspicion as war preparations were going on
in all fronts, Hirohito had been talking to his civilian chamberlains about
the possibility of going down to Hayama for a brief "vacation".
Bergamini continues,

"Since it was a bleak season of the year go to Hayama for such
an outing, those
who knew Hirohito's character assumed that he would be going to Hayama
to
disarm foreign observers by a show of unconcern before Japan's blitzkrieg"
(ibid., p. 817).

Hirohito left for Hayama on November 7, 1941. At the seaside villa,
he was free from most of the protocol and security. The imperial marine
biological yacht was equipped with ship-to-shore radiotelephone and running
lights for night voyages.

The Lord Privy Seal Kido, who accompanied Hirohito to Hayama, took care
of all state business during the Emperor's absence. In Hayama, he did not
see Hirohito until the tenth for a duration of forty-five minutes, and
then Hirohito disappeared the second time for a few more days. It was believed
that during his second disappearance, he was aboard the carrier Akagi which
was nearby at Yokosuka Naval Base, reviewing the the final coordination
of the Pearl Harbor attack fleet. Thereafter, a few days later, together
with Yamamoto's task force in Saiki Bay, in the northeast corner of Kyushu,
the fleet was to detach one by one, each ship moving northward at night,
under the cover of darkness, to the northern-most part of the deep Hitokappu
Bay in the Kuriles.

A few days later, on November 14, Hirohito resurfaced at Hayama to catch
up on civilian developments and to receive briefings from Prime Minister
Tojo and other Cabinet Ministers. Upon returning to Tokyo the following
day, he was immediately in conference with Army Chief of Staff reviewing
war preparations for the invasion of Malaya. Troops were scheduled to move
from Shanghai and other places bound for Indochina, Thailand, Burma, or
the Philippines.

On November 16, special Japanese envoy Kurusu submitted his credentials
in Washington and, at once, played the game of subterfuge. First, he submitted
Proposal A, Japan's final offer for an over-all settlement with the United
States. It was difficult for Secretary of State, Cordell Hull, to be impressed.
A year earlier, Kurusu was in Berlin representing Japan at the signing
of the Tripartite Pact. When Proposal A was turned down out of hand, Kurusu
proceeded to Proposal B, a plan for a return to the position prior to Japan's
occupation of southern Indochina and America's freezing of her assets.

While the game of subterfuge continued in Washington, final preparations
were going on according to the imperial schedule. On November 22, Lieutenant
General Hisaichi Terauchi, the commander-in-chief of the Strike-South forces
for all of Southeast Asia, moved his headquarters southward from Tokyo
to Taiwan.

During the week, in the calm waters of Hitokappu Bay, the fleet waited
for the other task force to arrive and assemble. On November 26, 1941,
they were to vanish again, together this time, eastward across the fog
of the north Pacific toward Pearl Harbor, steering between a narrow course
on the southern fringes of the U.S. air reconnaissance from the Aleutians
and the northern fringes of the reconnaissance from Guam and Midway. Total
secrecy could be better assured because, this time, the departure was watched
only by seals and walruses along the wintry beaches.

Back in Washington, a flurry of Japanese diplomatic activity was going
on -- with greater and greater intensity -- creating a facade to conceal
last-minute preparations.

The American Ambassador, Joseph Grew, had been warned by the Peruvian
Embassy
in Tokyo that "in the event of trouble breaking out between the
United States, the Japanese intend to make a surprise attack against Pearl
Harbor..." By the time U.S Naval Intelligence forwarded Grew's
note to Admiral Husband Kimmel in Hawaii, the warning was transformed into
a statement that "no move against Pearl Harbor appears imminent or
planned for the foreseeable future." A Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor
was considered inconceivable by all top officials in Washington. Japanese
troops were known to be moving transports down the China coast toward Malaya
or the Philippines and that was all that was expected. David Bergamini
observes,

"Hirohito had known better than to think that U.S. leaders were
genuinely
asleep, and so he had intervened to force through Yamamoto's plan over
the
objections of most of the top brass in the Japanese Navy General Staff.
Knowing nothing of Hirohito's power, the U.S. Office of Naval Operations
had
wrongly concluded, by majority vote, that a majority of their opposite
numbers
in Tokyo would have vetoed any plan to raid Pearl Harbor" (ibid.,
p. 827).

Another Imperial Conference was convened on Monday, December 1, 1941,
for the final go-ahead for war. The conference was only a ceremony to review
the progress of their preparations. Finally, Privy Council President Hara
stood up to speak on behalf of the Throne and explained why Hirohito felt
justified in deciding on war,

"In negotiating with the United States, our Empire hoped to maintain
peace by
making one concession after another...The United States is being utterly
conceited, obstinate, and disrespectful. It is regrettable indeed. We simply
cannot tolerate such an attitude.

"If we were to give in, we would surrender at a stroke not only
our benefits
from the Manchurian Incident but also our gains in the Sino-Japanese and
Russo-Japanese wars [of 1895 and 1905]. This we cannot do...Our nation,
governed by our magnificent national structure, is, from a spiritual point
of
view, certainly unsurpassed in all the world.

"I believe that the proposal before us cannot be avoided in the
light of present
circumstances, and I put my trust in my officers and men whose loyalty
is
supreme. I urge you to make every effort to keep the people in a tranquil
state
of mind, in order to prosecute a long-term war" (ibid.,
p. 831-2).

In reply to the Throne, Prime Minister General Tojo said:

"At this moment our Empire stands at the threshold of glory or
oblivion. We
tremble with fear in the Presence of His Majesty. We subjects are keenly
aware
of the great responsibilities we must assume from this point on. Now that
His
Majesty has reached a decision to commence hostilities, we must all strive
to
repay our obligations to him, bring the Government and the military ever
closer
together, resolve that the nation united will go on to victory, make an
all-out
effort to achieve our war aims, and set His Majesty's mind at ease. I now
adjourn the meeting" (ibid., p. 832).

On Wednesday, December 3, 1941, the Japanese fleet was 2,300 miles northeast
of Pearl Harbor. There, in the light swell amidst fog, the carriers took
on oil from the tankers which had accompanied them thus far on their historic
voyage. While the tankers and short-range destroyers turned back toward
Japan, the fast light carriers made their lightning dash toward Hawaii.

Two days later, on December 5, another Japanese task force was moving
toward the island of Hainan, getting ready to advance against the beaches
of Malaya. Later the same night, Hirohito gave approval for a Navy schedule
for handing the final note to Secretary of State Cordell Hull, informing
the United States of a disruption in diplomatic relations, just half-hour
before the appointed hour for the attack on Pearl Harbor.

Due to the genius of American intelligence at intercepting Japan's highest
security
diplomatic messages between Tokyo and Japanese ambassadors in Washington
and decoding them into English, President Roosevelt knew he had to expect
the worst outcome. Knowing that Japan meant to start war on or about one
o'clock (Washington time), the President consulted his advisors and decided
simply to wait. It was the policy that the United States should not react
until after Japan had struck. That was the way to keep an unblemished democratic
record. Furthermore, the majority of the President's military advisors
felt that Japan would gain only a small temporary advantage by striking
first, and only in Asia. David Bergamini states,

"There was a tendency on the part of U.S. admirals and generals
to
underestimate the fighting qualities of the Japanese soldier and the originality
and daring of the Japanese strategist" (ibid., p. 839).

President Roosevelt and his military advisors believed that the Japanese
were moving against Malaya while the Naval Base in Hawaii was placed on
"third alert", looking only for sabotage.

On that most infamous day, December 7, 1941, at 6 a.m. (Hawaiian time),
the fleet's
aircraft carrier, Akagi was just 230 miles north of Hawaii and while the
night was still black and the seas wild, the first wave of planes were
preparing to take-off under Commander Mitsuo Fuchida. Within fifteen minutes,
all 182 planes -- bombers, dive-bombers, torpedo planes and Zero fighters
-- would join Fuchida as he circled the fleet. Then, with a signal from
his wings, he lead the planes south. By 7:35 a.m., Fuchida saw the northern
side of the Hawaiian islands. Within the next twenty minutes all of Fuchida's
182 planes were converging on their targets from different angles and directions
for the attack on Pearl Harbor.

At 8:15 a.m., a second wave of 167 planes had arrived above Pearl Harbor
and accomplished almost nothing as there were nothing left to hit from
the first wave. Ships that were already mortally wounded were finished
off -- but no important new targets were identified or destroyed. The planes
returned to their fleet and back into the fog of the north Pacific for
an uneventful voyage back to Japan.

During those few hours, Malaya, Guam, Hong Kong and the Philippines were
attacked. Just before noon in Japan (December 8, Japanese date), Tokyo
radio finally broadcast the Emperor's message proclaiming war. It ended
as follows:

"...The hallowed spirits of Our Imperial Ancestors guarding
Us from above,
We rely upon the loyalty and courage of Our subjects in Our confident
expectation that the task bequeathed by Our Forefathers will be carried
forward,
and that the source of evil will be speedily eradicated and an enduring
peace
immutably established in East Asia, preserving thereby the glory of Our
Empire" (ibid., p. 849).

The Pacific war had begun and soon the whole of Southeast Asia was under
the control or influence of the Japanese military command. America had
underestimated the strategy of the Japanese, but at last, with a sigh of
relief, the President could declare war without being vetoed by Congress.
During the next few years,

"more than a hundred thousand Americans were to die in the effort
to subdue
'Japanese militarism.' And more than a million Japanese, who distrusted
militarism but honored the Emperor, died to defend whatever it was that
the
Americans opposed. The two cultures clashed tragically, with a hate
that fed
on ignorance, but the clash enabled the United States to make war on
Hitler"
(ibid.).

Hirohito had thus led Japan into war with the West. In the course of
his research into
the life of Hirohito, David Bergamini quoted the dairy of Japan's wartime
Army Chief of Staff, General Hajime Sugiyama, who committed suicide when
the war ended. In such testimony, the dairy

"revealed that Hirohito was asking detailed questions about
military and
economic planning in the months before Pearl Harbor...Most surprising,
the Sugiyama Memoranda stated that in January 1941, eleven months before
the
outbreak of war with the United States, Hirohito had personally ordered
a secret
evaluation to be made of the feasibility of a surprise attack on Pearl
Harbor.
The Sugiyama Memoranda revealed that Hirohito had participated
in the
Pearl Harbor planning a full six months before any of his official military
advisors were informed of it. Evidence taken before the Allied judges
of the
International Military Tribunal for the far east, and verified by witnesses
under
oath and cross-examination, demonstrated conclusively that none of the
'militarists' who were supposed to have dragged Hirohito to war knew of
the
Pearl Harbor plan until August 1941. General Tojo, the arch 'militarist'
who headed Japan's wartime Cabinet, was not told of the plan until November
1941"
(ibid., p. xxix).

Despite mounting evidence, the West continued to believe the best of
Hirohito, down to this day, exempting him of any war crimes. Truly amazing!

In his last days, the Emperor developed stomach cancer and had part
of his colon removed in 1987. Newspapers reported that Hirohito was also
suffering an inoperable tumor of the pancreas. The Imperial Household refused
to comment, preferring to keep his life, as usual, a secret. Hirohito
died on January 7, 1989, and he was renamed Emperor Showa (Peace Made Manifest).
The funeral ceremony was held on February 24, with a mixture of civil and
Shinto rites.

That day, the funeral was attended by 163 Heads of State and Government,
including
Britain's Prince Philip, Belgium's King Baudouin, King Juan Carlos of Spain,
King Carl Gustav XVI of Sweden, King Hussein of Jordan, President Aquino
of the Philippines, President George Bush and France's President Mitterrand.
As the yen is such a mighty instrument in today's commerce and trade, no
country could afford not to send its highest representative to the funeral.

Behind the scenes, the extremist right-wing elements had their way.
The Shinto rites was held behind an opaque black curtain and watched only
by members of his family, Imperial Household Officials and Shinto priests.
Sea bream, birds, mountain potatoes and melons were offered to the spirit
of the late Emperor, and his favorite personal effects, including his microscope,
which identified him as a marine biologist, were buried with him.

Germ Warfare

David Bergamini, who investigated deeply into Hirohito's life on a day
to day basis, expressed that on an ordinary Saturday morning, it was his
schedule to indulge his interest in marine biology. But Hirohito's intention
was, unfortunately, greatly misunderstood. David Bergamini found that Hirohito
was not merely building a scientific hobby to gain an unwarranted reputation
for himself through the effort of hired assistants. From the evidence of
his own published work and the diaries of his courtiers, they substantiate
conclusively that Hirohito was a good student of biological science, genuinely
interested, observant and knowledgeable.

Neither was Hirohito, as some others have thought, a preoccupied collector
of obscure marine organisms -- nor one who pursued science for its own
sake. The institutes which he subsidized over the years and the comments
which he made to intimates showed that "he believed in science as
a practical tool, a necessary tool of warfare, a tool in which he knew
Japan to be deficient".

David Bergamini's research went into great depths. Speaking of Hirohito,
he wrote:

"Thus he prided himself that his marine biological knowledge of
tides and
currents was of use in naval planning. Thus, too, in 1927, at a time when
the
very concept of biological warfare was novel in the West, a number of
biologists and physicians who were his former tutors had been encouraged
to
devote themselves full time to war research. By 1939 tissue cultures at
the
Imperial University would be producing the most virulent agents of yaws,
encephalitis, botulism, and bubonic plague known to medicine. After 1940
plague bombs containing bacilli or bacilli in fleas, or bacilli in rat
food would
be dropped repeatedly in China in unavailing experiments to find effective
germ-delivery systems. In 1945 Occupation search teams would find large
stockpiles of unused viruses, spirochetes, and fungus spores in decentralized
laboratories in Japanese rural areas" (ibid., p. 351).

Hirohito's connection to bacteriological warfare was confirmed by a
much later
researcher, Edward Behr. Behr, after researching into the life of Pu-Yi,
the puppet Emperor of Japanese-dominated Manchukuo, led him to research
the life of Emperor Hirohito. In his book, Hirohito: Behind the Myth,
he wrote:

"The decrease in the size of the army was compensated for by the
creation of
new tank and anti-tank units, a signals corps, and, later, a chemical and
bacteriological warfare centre -- these last two were, in part at least,
the
brainchild of the scientific minded Prince Kuni, Hirohito's father-in-law,
and
Hirohito himself; with his passion for science and marine biology, took
a keen
interest in both centres from their creation" (Hirohito:
Behind the Myth, 1989,
p. 76).

Years after the end of the Pacific war, revelations of the existence
of Japanese laboratories for research into bacteriological weapons in Manchuria
were brought to the attention of the world. These new deadly weapons were
tested on prisoners of war and cost thousands of lives. Such incidences
would have provided a case of centrally organized war criminality in Japan.
Yet, everything connected with this crime was kept from the Tokyo war crimes
trial.

Edward Behr wrote that veterans of the "Imperial" unit, otherwise
known as "Unit 731", were inordinately proud of its "imperial"
origin, pointing out that theirs was the only army unit ever set up by
"imperial decree".

"Unit 731" was the brainchild of General Shire Ishii. General
Ishii was known to Hirohito. Later, Ishii was promoted, and bestowed by
Hirohito with the highest honor -- the Order of the Rising Sun.

The American military authorities were aware of such crimes but they wanted
to avail themselves of the results of these experiments. As the Cold War
loomed over the horizon, American officials tried to prevent any research
information from falling into the hands of the Soviet Union. On one hand,
the Japanese criminals involved in these misdemeanors had all the confidential
data, while on the other hand, Douglas MacArthur and his minions wanted
the data for themselves. So a scheme was set up whereby criminals were
promised immunity by MacArthur from prosecution in exchange for divulging
the results obtained from the experiments. MacArthur maintained this arrangement
and thus the whole scheme was kept secret during the Tokyo trial. The criminals
were happy not to be prosecuted and, so too, was MacArthur, because he
would have all the most up-to-date scientific data for himself, and in
a very inexpensive way.

When the Tokyo trial was brought up for review at an international symposium
on May 28-29, 1983 in Tokyo, the Dutch judge, B. V. A. Roling, was the last
remaining judge from the original trial. During the Tokyo Trial in 1946-48,
Roling was the youngest judge at the age of just under forty. In 1985,
writing from Groningen, he expressed,

"The prestige of the trial has been severely damaged by the revelation
of the
existence in Manchuria of a Japanese laboratory for research into bacteriological
weapons.

"...It is not inconceivable that it was strictly a military matter,
kept by the
minister of defense from his colleagues in the government. But it remains
a
disturbing fact that this, the worst of Japanese crimes, was kept from
the
tribunal" (The Tokyo War Crimes Trial, An International
Symposium,
Introduction, by B. V. A. Roling, p. 18).

At a late stage of the Pacific war, Russia declared war against Japan
to revenge her defeat forty years previously. The Red Army then seized
much of Manchuria against almost no opposition from the weakened Kwangtung
Army. During the 1983 symposium, Judge Roling expressed his enigma, "It
is incomprehensible that the Russian prosecutor did not reveal the affair."
The notion that the Russians had a mirror motive of the Americans did not
enter his thoughts.

As to the life of Hirohito, it is a mystery to many people. Despite
mounting evidence
that the Emperor was not only deeply involved in the war but also acted
as an instigator, by placing the right men at the right places, by coaxing
and guiding his pupils through persistent questioning of his generals'
aims and tactics, he, ironically, managed to evade any responsibility for
the war. He was granted immunity by Douglas MacArthur, especially after
their first meeting of September, 1945. In the course of granting immunity
to the Emperor, it was also necessary to grant immunity to members of his
family, for it would not be possible to spare Hirohito while at the same
time, pursuing his close relatives in the trial.

The myth of Hirohito's innocence is not only widely accepted within
Japan, but is extended beyond its shores. Few ever did realized that Hirohito
was not an Emperor for nothing, he was, by his deeds and testimonies of
his trusted courtiers, indeed, The Emperor. Such misconception is
as widespread among most Western academics as those in Japan, and is backed
by generations of diplomats and foreigners based in Tokyo, ever enchanted
by Japanese friendliness, geisha and culture, and now, the mighty yen.

In the days after Japan's defeat through the bombings of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki, few discerned the role of Japan's female forces at work and the
corruption during the seven years of the Occupation forces. Modern historians,
lawyers, judges, diplomats and other specialists were astonished and bewildered
by their own inadequacies to comprehend the mysteries of Japan. This is
due in large part by their own field of specialty, seeing only the individual
tree without an awareness of the existence of the forest, leaving a large
part of the riddle left unraveled. One can be reminded of the story of
six blind men trying to fathom what they feel by touching a part of a whole
picture of an elephant, and so likewise are these specialists. The next
article, Victory by A-Bombs, Defeat in Kimono expounds the
missing dimension of Japanese history, the vital piece of the whole puzzle.

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